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Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina has resigned, interim govt to run country: army chief

Major changes in army high command.​


*Major General Zia has been fired

*Lieutenant General Md Saiful Alam has been assigned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

*Lieutenant General Md Mojibur Rahman has been appointed GOC Army Training and Doctrine Command

*Lieutenant General Ahmad Tabrez Shams Chowdhury has been appointed as Quartermaster General of the Army

*Lieutenant General Mizanur Shamim has been appointed as the Chief of General Staff of the Army.


*Lieutenant General Mohammad Shaheenul Haque as Commandant NDC

*Major General ASM Ridwanur Rahman as Director General of National Telecommunication Monitoring Centre (NTMC).
 
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Pakistani government must immediately recall the ambassador and severe ties till restoration of democracy in regions of Bengal and Arakan.
 
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Hasina sought to come at 'short notice': India minister​

Meryl Sebastian
BBC News, Kochi

Getty Images Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina seen in a pink sari and golden pin
Getty Images
Sheikh Hasina arrived in India on Monday after fleeing Bangladesh

Ousted Bangladeshi PM Sheikh Hasina made a request to come to India "at very short notice", the Indian foreign minister told parliament.

Ms Hasina fled from Bangladesh to India on Monday evening after a political crisis toppled her government.

Foreign Minister S Jaishankar did not mention how long she would stay in the country or what her next steps would be.

In his first official comments since the crisis peaked in Bangladesh, he said India had been in regular contact with authorities in Dhaka over the past 24 hours.

Ms Hasina resigned on Monday after weeks of deadly anti-government protests. The country's army chief has promised that an interim government will be formed and new elections will be announced.

India shares a 4,096km (2,545 miles)-border with Bangladesh and has close economic and cultural ties with the country. There are worries that prolonged tensions in Bangladesh could spill over into India, which is seen as having supported Ms Hasina through her 15-year-long tenure despite her clamping down on dissent and jailing opposition leaders.

On Monday, India deployed additional troops along its border with Bangladesh.
 
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People shake hands with army personnel as they celebrate the resignation of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 5, 2024. REUTERS/Mohammad Ponir Hossain     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

Bangladesh army refused to suppress protest, sealing Hasina’s fate: report

General Wakeruz Zaman, who is related to Hasina by marriage, had showed signs of wavering in his support for the prime minister on Saturday.

Reuters
August 7, 2024


The night before long-time leader Sheikh Hasina abruptly fled Bangladesh amid deadly protests, her army chief held a meeting with his generals and decided that troops would not open fire on civilians to enforce a curfew, two serving army officers with knowledge of the discussions told Reuters.

General Wakeruz Zaman then reached out to Hasina’s office, conveying to the prime minister that his soldiers would be unable to implement the lockdown she had called for, according to an Indian official briefed on the matter.

The message was clear, the official said: Hasina no longer had the army’s support.

Details of the online meeting between military top brass and the message to Hasina that she had lost their backing have not previously been reported.

They help to explain how Hasina’s 15-year rule, during which she brooked little dissent, came to such a chaotic and sudden end on Monday, when she fled from Bangladesh to India.

The nationwide curfew had been imposed after at least 91 people were killed and hundreds injured in nationwide clashes on Sunday, the deadliest day since student-led protests against Hasina began in July.

Army spokesman Lt. Col. confirmed the Sunday evening discussions, which he described as a regular meeting to take updates after any disturbance. He did not provide details when presented with additional questions about decision-making at that meeting.

Hasina could not be reached and her son and advisor, Sajeeb Wazed, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.


Members of the army clear an entrance of the Ganabhaban, the Bangladeshi prime minister’s residence, a day after the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 6, 2024. — Reuters

Members of the army clear an entrance of the Ganabhaban, the Bangladeshi prime minister’s residence, a day after the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 6, 2024. — Reuters


Reuters spoke to ten people familiar with the events of the past week, including four serving army officers and two other informed sources in Bangladesh, to piece together the final 48 hours of Hasina’s reign. Many of them spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter.

Hasina, who has ruled Bangladesh for 20 of the last 30 years, was elected to a fourth term leading the country of 170 million in January, after arresting thousands of opposition leaders and workers. That election was boycotted by her main rivals.

Her iron-fisted grasp on power has been challenged since summer by protests triggered by a court ruling to reserve government jobs — heavily coveted amid high youth unemployment — for certain segments of the population. The decision was overturned but the demonstrations had quickly morphed into a movement to oust Hasina.

Zaman has not publicly explained his decision to withdraw support from Hasina. But the scale of the protests and a death toll of at least 241 made supporting Hasina at all costs untenable, three former senior Bangladesh army officers told Reuters.

“There was a lot of uneasiness within the troops,” said retired Brig. Gen. M. Sakhawat Hossain. “That is what probably (put) pressure on the chief of army staff, because the troops are out and they are seeing what is happening.”

Zaman, who is related to Hasina by marriage, had showed signs of wavering in his support for the prime minister on Saturday, when he sat on an ornate wooden chair and addressed hundreds of uniformed officers in a town hall meeting. The military later made some details of that discussion public.

The general declared that lives had to be protected and called on his officers to show patience, said army spokesman Chowdhury.

It was the first indication that Bangladesh’s army would not forcefully suppress the violent demonstrations, leaving Hasina vulnerable.

Retired senior soldiers such as Brig. Gen. Mohammad Shahedul Anam Khan were among those who defied the curfew on Monday and took to the streets.

“We were not stopped by the army,” said Khan, a former infantry soldier. “The army has done what he had promised the army would do.”

On Monday, the first full day of the indefinite nationwide curfew, Hasina was holed up inside the Ganabhaban, or “People’s Palace”, a heavily-guarded complex in the capital Dhaka that serves as her official residence.​


Outside, on the streets of the sprawling city, crowds gathered. Tens of thousands of people had answered protest leaders’ call for a march to oust the leader, streaming into the heart of the city.

With the situation spiralling out of her control, the 76-year-old leader decided to flee the country on Monday morning, according to the Indian official and two Bangladesh nationals familiar with the matter.

Hasina and her sister, who lives in London but was in Dhaka at the time, discussed the matter and flew out together, according to a Bangladesh source. They left for India around lunch, local time.

Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar told parliament on Tuesday that New Delhi had urged “various political forces with whom we were in touch” to resolve the situation via dialogue throughout July.

But as crowds gathered in Dhaka on Monday ignoring the curfew, Hasina decided to resign “after a meeting with leaders of the security establishment”, he added. “At very short notice, she requested approval to come for the moment to India.”

A second Indian official said it was “diplomatically” conveyed to Hasina that her stay had to be temporary for fear of negatively impacting Delhi’s ties with the next government in Dhaka. India’s Ministry of External Affairs did not immediately return a request for comment.


People visit the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Memorial Museum, which was vandalised after the resignation of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 6, 2024. — Reuters

People visit the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Memorial Museum, which was vandalised after the resignation of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 6, 2024. — Reuters


Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, whom the protesting students want to lead the interim government after Hasina’s ouster, told The New Indian Express newspaper that India had “good ties with the wrong people… Please revisit your foreign policy.”

Yunus wasn’t immediately available for an interview.

Late in the afternoon on Monday, a Bangladesh Air Force C130 transport aircraft landed at Hindon air base outside Delhi, with Hasina on board.

There, she was met by Ajit Doval, India’s powerful national security advisor, according to the Indian security official.

Delhi had fought to carve Bangladesh out of East Pakistan in 1971. After Hasina’s father was assassinated in 1975, Hasina took refuge in India for years and built deep links with her neighbour’s political elite.

Returning to Bangladesh, she gained power in 1996, and was seen as more sensitive to India’s security concerns than her political rivals. The Hindu-majority nation also regarded her secular stance as favourable for the 13 million Hindus in Bangladesh.

But back in Bangladesh, resentment still lingered even among retired soldiers that Hasina had been allowed to leave.

“Personally, I feel that she should not have been given a safe passage,” said Khan, the veteran. “That was a folly.”

Header image: People shake hands with army personnel as they celebrate the resignation of Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 5, 2024. — Reuters
 
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Sacked Bangladeshi intelligence chief 'arrested' at Dhaka Airport​

Maj Gen Ziaul Ahsan was arrested after Emirates Flight 585 was instructed to taxi back to boarding bridge from runway.

News Desk
August 07, 2024

tribune


Major General Ziaul Ahsan, who was removed from his position in the Bangladesh military, was detained around midnight on Tuesday after his plane was brought back from the Dhaka airport runway to the boarding bridge, local media reported.

The former intelligence chief was taken off the aircraft and transported to the Dhaka cantonment.

According to sources at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, Ziaul Ahsan was arrested after Emirates Flight 585 was instructed to taxi back to the boarding bridge from the runway.

During the search, a passenger was detained, and the plane was subsequently allowed to depart.

Local media have identified the detained individual as Major General Ziaul Ahsan, the former intelligence chief.

Ahsan was relieved of his duties yesterday. He was known to be a close associate of the recently resigned PM Hasina.

Since 2022, Major General Ziaul Ahsan has served as the Director General of the National Telecommunication Monitoring Centre. Prior to that, he was the Director of the same agency.

Ziaul Ahsan became the vice-captain of Rab-2 in 2009 when he was a major. In the same year, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel and appointed director of the intelligence wing of the Rab headquarters. From that time many controversies were created about him.
 
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Yunus urges Bangladeshis to ‘get ready to build the country’

AFP
August 7, 2024

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s Muhammad Yunus, who is set to lead a caretaker government after mass protests ousted the premier, called on compatriots Wednesday to be “ready to build the country”, ahead of his hugely anticipated return.

The Nobel-winning microfinance pioneer will head the interim government after longtime and autocratic prime minister Sheikh Hasina fled the country, the presidency has said.

“Be calm and get ready to build the country,” Yunus said Wednesday in a statement, a day ahead of his expected return to the country from France, urging calm after weeks of violence in which at least 455 people were killed.

“If we take the path of violence everything will be destroyed,” he added.

The appointment came quickly after student leaders called on the 84-year-old Yunus – credited with lifting millions out of poverty in the South Asian country – to lead.

The decision was made in a meeting with President Mohammed Shahabuddin, the heads of the army, navy and air force, and student leaders, the president’s office said in a statement.

Yunus will have the title of chief adviser, according to Nahid Islam, one of the leaders of Students Against Discrimination who participated in the meeting.

Shahabuddin agreed that the interim government “will be formed within the shortest time” possible, Islam told reporters, describing the meeting as “fruitful”.

A Bangladesh court on Wednesday acquitted Yunus of a labour conviction on appeal, his lawyer Khaja Tanvir Ahmed told AFP.

Yunus had traveled abroad earlier this year after he was sentenced to six months in jail for the labour charge – but was immediately bailed pending appeal.

The case was criticised as politically motivated by watchdogs including Amnesty International.

‘Victory’

There are few other details about the planned government, including the role of the military, but Yunus has said he wants to hold elections “within a few” months.

“I congratulate the brave students who took the lead in making our Second Victory Day possible, and to the people for giving your total support to them,” Yunus added.

“Let us make the best use of our new victory. Let us not let this slip away because of our mistakes.”

Hasina, 76, who had been in power since 2009, resigned on Monday as hundreds of thousands of people flooded the streets of Dhaka demanding she stand down.

Monday’s events were the culmination of more than a month of unrest, which began as protests against a plan for quotas in government jobs but morphed into an anti-Hasina movement.

Hasina, who was accused of rigging the January elections and widespread human rights abuses, deployed security forces to quash the protests.

‘Stop the violence’

Hundreds of people were killed in the crackdown, but the military turned against Hasina on the weekend and she was forced to flee in a helicopter to neighbouring India.

Army chief General Waker-Uz-Zaman said on Sunday it was “time to stop the violence”.

The military has since acceded to a range of other demands from the student leaders, aside from Yunus’s appointment.

The president dissolved parliament on Tuesday, another demand of the student leaders and the former opposition Bangladesh National Party (BNP).

The head of the police force, which protesters have blamed for leading Hasina’s crackdown, was sacked on Tuesday, the president’s office said in the statement announcing Yunus as leader.

Ex-prime minister and BNP chairperson Khaleda Zia, 78, was also released from years of house arrest, a presidential statement and her party said.

Political prisoners have been released, including Michael Chakma, an Indigenous activist incarcerated in a secret prison since 2019, his United People’s Democratic Front party said on Wednesday.

And the military reshuffled several generals, demoting some seen as close to Hasina, and sacking Ziaul Ahsan, a commander of the feared Rapid Action Battalion paramilitary force.

Free from ‘dictatorship’

Since Tuesday, streets in the capital have been largely peaceful – with shops opening and international flights resuming at Dhaka airport – but government offices remained mostly closed.

Millions of Bangladeshis had flooded the streets to celebrate after Hasina’s departure – and jubilant crowds also looted her official residence.

“We have been freed from a dictatorship,” said Sazid Ahnaf, 21, comparing the events to the independence war that split the nation from Pakistan more than five decades ago.

Police said mobs had launched revenge attacks on Hasina’s allies and their own officers, and also freed more than 500 inmates from a prison.

Monday was the deadliest day since protests began, with at least 455 people killed since early July, according to an AFP tally based on police, government officials and hospital doctors.

Protesters broke into parliament and torched TV stations. Others smashed statues of Hasina’s father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Bangladesh’s independence hero.

Some businesses and homes owned by Hindus – a group seen by some in the Muslim-majority nation as close to Hasina – were also attacked.

Bangladeshi rights groups, as well as US and European Union diplomats, have expressed concerns about reports of attacks on religious, ethnic and other minority groups.

Neighbouring India and China, both key regional allies of Bangladesh, have called for calm.
 
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New Bangladesh police chief vows probe into protest killings, offers apology

AFP
August 7, 2024

07202452248cf71.jpg

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DHAKA: Bangladesh’s newly appointed police chief on Wednesday offered an apology for the conduct of officers during deadly protests and vowed an “impartial” probe into the killings.

“We are committed to conduct a fair and impartial investigation into every recent killing of students, common people and the police”, Inspector General of Police Md. Mainul Islam told reporters.

“In the current protests… our previous responsible officials were not able to fulfill their duties as per the expectations of the countrymen,” he added, a day after he was appointed following the ouster of the prime minister.

“I, as the chief of police, apologise on behalf of the Bangladesh Police for that.”

He also said he had asked police units to end their strike and return to duty on Thursday, when Nobel-winning microfinance pioneer Muhammad Yunus is set to return to the country to lead a caretaker government.

More than 400 people were killed during weeks of clashes between protesters and security forces before ex-prime minister Sheikh Hasina quit on Monday.

Among 44 dead bodies brought to Dhaka Medical College Hospital on Monday – the deadliest day since unrest began in early July – many of them were young men and almost all had bullet wounds.
 
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Shock but dreaming of change​


Samira Hussain
BBC News, Dhaka

Simon Fraser
BBC News


BBC Julkernayeem

BBC
Julkernayeem Rahat and other students have taken over from police on Dhaka's streets, for now

In Dhaka, students are on the streets directing traffic and keeping things running as police stage a strike following the popular uprising that toppled prime minister Sheikh Hasina.

The police, normally highly visible, are nowhere to be seen on the usually loud and congested streets of the Bangladeshi capital.

It seems that only students and some paramilitary forces are trying to maintain law and order, after weeks of unrest in which hundreds have been killed. An interim government is promised, but has yet to take office.

Police now fear for their safety after the deadly crackdown that caused so much anger. It failed to quell anti-government protests that had begun over civil service job quotas last month.



Noorjahan Mily


Noorjahan Mily wants freedom of expression and an end to corruption

Things are calmer two days after Ms Hasina escaped to India, but there are continuing reports of sporadic looting and violence during the power vacuum.

Many Bangladeshis, particularly the young, hope the country is at a turning point.

“I want freedom of expression. I want a corruption-free country. I want people to have the right to protest,” Noorjahan Mily, 21, an Open University student, told the BBC.

“I am uncertain about where the country is heading, because the government has changed. But whether the discrimination will remain or not, I will only be happy when their demands are met.”

The country is now trying to come to terms with the shock of what has just happened, now that power has been prised from the hands of the country's long-time ruler.

More than 400 people were killed in the recent unrest, most of them civilians shot by security forces, but also a number of police. It’s the bloodiest episode since the war that brought the country independence in 1971.

Reuters Members of the army clear an entrance of the Ganabhaban, the Bangladeshi prime minister's residence, a day after the resignation of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, August 6, 2024.

Reuters

Soldiers clear up after cheering crowds overran the prime minister's residence on Monday
At the airport, a worker handed me my bags, telling me the situation is very bad and the government used too much force.

“Many kids – as young as six, seven and eight – were killed,” he said.

Outside the airport, students wearing orange hi-vis vests were directing traffic.

“There’s no police here, only students,” the driver said. “There is no government, students are doing 100% security.”

He agreed with the students, saying they had done a good thing.

As we drove on, a group of students were putting out plastic cones to control the flow of vehicles.

“I’m here to protect my brothers and help with the traffic. From the very beginning, I participated in the quota movement that turned into a massive movement,” Julkernayeem Rahat, a business administration student at University of Asia Pacific, told the BBC.
 
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Troubled Bangladesh’s economy bogged down by high unemployment, inflation

Reuters
August 8, 2024

Garment workers come out of a factory during the lunch break as factories remain open despite a countrywide lockdown, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 6, 2021. — Reuters/File


Garment workers come out of a factory during the lunch break as factories remain open despite a countrywide lockdown, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 6, 2021. — Reuters/File

The student protests that forced Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to quit and flee the country were also fuelled by tough economic conditions in what was once the world’s fastest-growing economy.


Under Hasina, Bangladesh has in recent years seen a sharp widening of its current account deficit, depreciation of the taka currency, and a decline in its foreign exchange reserves.

Readymade garments are a mainstay of Bangladesh’s economy, which is the third-largest exporter of clothing in the world.

Low wages have helped the country build the industry, but soaring living costs have sparked protests by garment workers calling for higher salaries.

The economy has slowed sharply since the Russia-Ukraine war pushed up prices of fuel and food imports, forcing Bangladesh to turn last year to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a $4.7 billion bailout.

In July, protests against job quotas in public sector jobs intensified amid stagnant job growth in the private sector as nearly 32 million young people are out of work or education in a population of 170 million.

The central bank held rates at 8.5 per cent in July, after raising them twice earlier this year.

Inflation stood at 9.72pc in June and the central bank aims to bring it to 6.5pc by fiscal 2025.

The country’s GDP rose to 6.1pc in the Jan-March quarter, according to data released in July.

IMF concluded a second review in June, giving the country immediate access to about $928 million in loans for economic support and about $220 million to combat climate change.

In the report, the IMF said it expects economic growth to be at 5.4pc in the fiscal year 2024, higher than 4.8pc recorded in the first half.
 
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